The Atlanta weekly intelligencer. (Atlanta, Ga.) 184?-1855, December 09, 1854, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

A. - •• i r • j> p *• ; . ♦ « g i •>*•*-. * «nu§ **r’»’r .ir f Y* f| ^ •=.-■ * '.. ;• vj a: fjrtk l^uv a ••. -«-•♦•*. *•».*•** BY W. B. RUGGLES. ATLANTA. GEORGIA, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 9, 1854. YQL. YL NO. T1IE ATLANTA INTELLIGENCER Dali)-. Trl-Weekly ««* Weekly. iff 3 hugOLES, Editor and Proprietor. j terns or SUBSCRIPTION. Daily Intelligencer per annum, In advance $8.00 . Tri-Weekly, “ “ Weekly, “ ‘ 200 RATES OF ADVKRTISSKO. Vlvcrtining in the Daily Intelligencer will he I Hwrte«l ft* the following rate* per ftqamro of t«n | One insertion, «0 rt?. One month, *5 0« T«r,, •• $1 00 Two “ 8 00 ; Three •• 1 25 Threa « 10 00 P >ii- • 1 50 Four “ 12 00 r n o 1 75 Six “ 15 00 One n, ck. 2 00 One year, 25 00 | Slice ini eon tract* will he ma<Ie for yearly adver- j liecincutf occupying a quarter, half or whole col- j iiiuii. fj- Adicrtisemeuta from tranaient persona j mu-t he paid in advance. j Legal advertifementa published at the usual . ml,... Obituary notices exceeding ten linos eharg- j e l a- advertisements. Announcing candidates for 1 •fin e, f 5 00, to he paid in advance. When advertisements are ordered in all tho is- ,ues. including Daily, Tri-Weekly and Weekly, , 05 ),cr cent, will he added to the above rates. j The privilege of yearly advertisers is strictly limited t • their own immediate and regular busi- nes". Professional Cards not exceeding six lines, $15 per annum. 1 \dvertisomeaits not specified as to time will be , published till ordered out, anil charged at regular , rates. Divert Dements inserted in the Weekly paper ’ only will he charged at former rates. WEEKLY INTELLIGENCER.J Id BUSHED EVERT SATURDAY MORNING. j ,, Two la.liars per atiuuiu. invariably in advance | MONDAY, DECEMBER 4. The Know-Nathlngs. It seems that an influence is arising in the Know-Nothing camp at the North, etr.mgly favoring the idea of discarding the secret element in tho new creed, and carry ing on the party operations, like other par ties. by daylight. Such a project has been distinctly urged by no loss a personage than Hun. .1. M. Ci.avtox, in one of his recent speeches. The suggestion has been warmly -c-onded by other parties high in the favor and eontidenco of the organization, and it is by no moans improbable that before the Presidential campaign of 1856 is fairly under way the Know-Nothings will take the field as a distinct and open political party. It strikes us that when the Know-Nothings unco throw aside their sccresy and inscribe their real principles on their standards, thus opening their measures and objects to tie- free investigation and discussion of the people, their triumphs will be at an end.— Doubtless much of their strength and most of their recent victories arc owing mainly to the secret element of the order—the uni tv and compactness of their political move ments arising from the absence of the direct and effective opposition which entire public ity would have incurred—the novelty, and fascination for the mob held out by the idea of a secret organization, and the moral obli gation which the initiatory oath may be v apposed to impose upon each individual member of the order to follow in the exact line of its dictation. To throw aside the veil of secresv would be to surrender the great source of its strength. The princi ples it aims to establish cannot stand the ordeal of free discussion, or the originators of the order would never have so carefully endeavored to throw around them the clonk of secresv. They have more than once in other forms been condemnnd by the intelli gent and enlightened public sentiment of the country. The mere suspicion of enter taining similar sentiments overwhelms Gen. Si i.tt with the most disastrous defeat that ever fell upon an aspirant for presidential honors, and should the Know-Nothings bring out n presidential candidate openly on the platform of principles he will meet with a more humiliating defeat than that of the hero of Vera Cruz. We learn from the Columbia Times that Mr. Henry Eggeos, an assistant upon the freight train of cars from Charleston, on Kiuidav. after the cars had started, about nine miles below Columbia, attempting to pass from the tender to the engine, slipped, fell and received injuries in the fall which terminated his existence in a few moments. Tlil« unfortunate individual, it is stated, has i family residing iu New York. \ ioiit Cabs.—Somebody in Buffalo claims j to have invented a greatly improved seat for ! railroad cars running in the night time. ; which is readily converted into a horizontal ' bed. provided with coverings and surround- i oil with curtains; y An excellent thing of the kind is in use on the New Jersey Centrai Railroad. The hack of the seat can be rais ed or depressed, to support the head iu au easy position, and the entire scat can be so ■ adjusted as to greatly favor repose. Gf.n. Cars a Candidate for the Presi- ' i>EXf\.—The Detroit' Times, liuticinga state ment of a Washington paper to the effect that General Cass had given up all ideas of i lu- Presidency, says: The assumption that Gen. Cass had laid aside all aspirations for the Presidency is entirely gratuitous on the part of our Wash ington cotemporary. Hero at home his friends protest against thus coldly despatch ing him with a single stroke of the pen, and will, by his consent, bring his name forward in their own time. We say distinctly that Gen. Cass will lie a candidate before the .National Convention, and nothing is more calculated to sharpen that determination than just such paragraphs as the above, and the occasional blows which he receives from a large portion of the Southern press. Homicide at Hamburg.—A man named Pass Anderson was killed on last Saturday night by a pistol shot through the heart, tired by a mau named William Murphy.— Murphy absconded. He was in Augusta mi Monday. Tut Montgomery Lottery.—The follow ing arc the principal prizes drawn in the Southern Military Academy Lottery on Thursday: $15000; 1672, $5000; 1781, s4<hMl; ;V<47, $3000 ; 4231, $2000 ; 9688, §1500: 280. 81100; 856, 7451, 1524, 4874, 104.3, 81000 each. Railroad Accident.—We learn from the Montgomery Mail of IV ednesday evening, that as the accommodation train on the Montgomery & West Point Railroad, was I eat ing Rough A Ready station, on Tuesday, Mr. Wm. A. Ballard, Conductor, in attempt ing to get on. slipped and the wheels passed • oer his limt, mangling it dreadfully. It w;,« nipp"sed that amputation would lie necessary. The Trihmtr estimates the number Know Nothings in the State of New York at 70,000—50.000 Whigs and 20,000 Democrat*. Western Pork Trade.—At L»iuisvilf<£ up to the 22d ini-uint, 63,0* *1 Log.-'-had be.qn . slaughtered, and 2o,u00 ntmshnti in ih-iis. i The market was firm, .-Ind drm er- : de*nund- * ing 4J(5 3 cent.-, per It*. Buyer-, lni>y-ever. 1 very generally, were offering only 44 cents, j At Cincinnati, up to the 21w inst.. 42,00*} hogs had !>een received. At Springfield, t 111., last week, 3,000 hogs were sold at S3,- i 25(a,$SfCi per cwt. Many farmers in Hlin- j ois have been unwilling to sell at these, prices, but the severe pressure in the money • market has compelled them to yield. Monkeys I>vint. nr * ’ifoi.era.—It is j stated that the monkeys in the neighbor-• hood of Trinidad are dying in great num- i liera of the cholera. Perseus who have j passed through the woods report that Iran- j dreds are to be seen lying dead on the I ground, where they have fallen from the • trees. It is said the same was observed ' while the small pox epidemic prevailed in j Trinidad, the monkeys dying of that dis- i ease in equally large numl>ers. flkay- The Philadelphia 1‘nrtnsytranian of Saturday contains uu official call for a meet- 1 ing of the Pennsylvania State Committee, on the 26th proximo, - for the purpose,’’ as the call says, - of organizing the Demo- 1 crutic party on a more permanent basis, consolidating it against the secret and iu-; siduous assaults that have for a time im paired its usefulness and efficiency in carry-, ing out our cherished principles, and to render it impregnable in future against the ! approaches of tho various and dangerous isms and delusions of the day." j The Cherokee Insurance Bank.—Th Dalton Timex of Thursday says that our statement that the above institution had failed, is a mistake—that "‘not a dollar has been presented at the counter but what was . redeemed or the person presenting it satis fied and secured against loss,’ and that ‘‘in ( a few days all will be right again.' l or j the information of those who may be led by i the above statement to think that our an- j nouncement <>f the failure of the Bunk at- Dalton was .premature, we will simply state that the way Mr. Oicnn, who present ed §1500 at the counter for redemption last, week, was “satisfied and secured against I loss,’' was by receiving an order on a cer-i tain lawyer who held in his hand certain '• accounts of the Dunk, said to amount to ; about four thousand dollars the order being , accepted,payable when sufficient funds shall i have been collected over ami above the amount necessary to liquidate prior claims I already in his hands. It this does not amount to a failure it has a most decided J leaning that way. Independence. Sometime since we noticed and comment- 1 edon an editorial of the Savanuah Georgian, j in which the editors of that paper, declared j themselves, for the future, independent of | the imagined obligation resting upou the managers of newspapers to give up their : time and labor and columns, free gratis, for ; the advancement of every politician’s cause, who may possibly have a desire for official i honors. Tho plan of our Savannah coteni- < porarieshas been very generally seconded by tho press throughout the State. < Comment ing on the -qme theme the Macon f’lfizen says: j “Now, we agree with the Savannah Geor gian iu its recent declaration of Ind'pui- dfiice from all such onerous exactions and t burdens, and announce that, henceforth and forever, we will publish no communication intended to advance the interests of candid ates for office, unless such communications are paid lbr as advertisements. Every arti cle which appears iu this paper costs it.-, a special outlay of ras’i, and wo cannot there fore afford to ‘go a warfare, (for others) at onr own charges.’ The advocacy of prin ciples is one thing, and the support of in dividuals another quite a different affair.— We wish it, therefore, understood, that we prosecute our business for a consideration, and those who desire the aid of our journal to advance their private schemes, must cal culate to pay for the privilege.’’ BfeLr'Tt is stated in a Paris letter as a very I remarkable fact, and one highly creditable 1 to the chivalry of the Americans in Paris, that they had in a body determined to leave , the city in case of a refusal to retract- the fOorre*v''n<ii.r>r»» ..-f tl.e Onth njteWsericer.J Matters and Tiling* In Sear York. Nr.sr York. Nov. 28: 1854. Kflch succeeding day brings to ligbl some new tuid startling development of frond, defalcation, extravagance or carelessness in the circle? of mon ey .,r lani-liinery. Or if you turn from Wall st., from railroad conductors, engines and switch, leaders, steam boilers and coal pits, axe factories and crumbling walls, relentless wares and fatal rocks in ambuscades, and look upon mau in what should lie his happy social relations, with his companions we are equally shocked, by the terri bly beastly conduct of demons in human shape, inaddcued by ruin, tearing and gnashing, making a psndimoniuin before their time. {scarcely were the affairs of the Ocean Bank, with its heavy frond committed by its tellers, silted when a similar one on the part of a similar officer Lard P*lnirr*tiin’» Mission So Frantt-^ Proposed ('huge of Programme. The London correspondent *-f the X. Y. Timex writes a- follows, under date «>t No vember 14; If the allies are Iteaten. the Western- Cabinets will immediately address a joint letter to Austria as well as to Prussia, whieb two powers will lie required to deebire them selves wtthouc delay. I have most relia ble information that Lord Palmerston, who left town this evening (14thi for a visit to the French Emperor, has been trusted with? the treatment of two p- hit? of vital import ance, both relating t*> the unexpected hut • still dreaded eventuality of die failure of ■ the expedition. The majority of the Cain- i net Ministers have. I am assured, conside rably changed their minds in respect to car rying on the war. laird John and \ iscoum mb F3 KOPEAV JIE4VS! j lu the attack oivihe 5th. forty thousand Latest hy the Steiuatr Africa. | Russians were, engaged, Several of - their New York, Nov. 29.—The Royal mail j redoubt were taken, but again re-captured. IueMnUef thrBattle *f BatakUva. 'I’CKSDAY. PKt\ 5 We glean fr.uiV oiir- foreign file* the fob -j lowing interesting Incidents of the great 1 * Tin: Son. of Vun Sm ru.—The De_ c ..,..v. ■ - ~ .. ... - ~ * battle "of Baluklava. Tfe oraid find an v va- ."number of this excellent, a^icultmal work 1 Africa arrived here this evening . General Brown was wounded, and has had . • •_ i L.,i! ' . ’ .. ;. ' I from Liverpool, with 66 passengers dnd ■* an’ arm amputated. t iety-o- tliem, mt ou y haye reran or t le t w-oiji our tabic, i he Sot, nj /■!>: i« a plates to : the 18th instant, being four days The Russians had left the heights of Ba- tollowrtig: j favorite monthly and well worth tlie i laier tbr.n (he advices per steamer Baltie. laklavn, and weie expecting reinforce- the Russians. : subscription price at which it is published. ! The siege of Sebastopol was progressing meoU. I saw two orders or medals which had ; Terms, one <1 !!ar per atmiim. • slowly; but no decisive resnlf had been at- Steam frigdi^ hart arrived at Batenw to inined. ! convey from thence 4000 troops to the Cri- All the mail steamers- had been taken up men. by :he British.government to send instant j Lettcrs fyoin Constantinople, dated Nov. reinforcements’ to the allied army. There | titli, state that 5000 French troops had sail- jl mm iwu uriwra ur u.piuui Milieu iiiiii i ticcn taken from the coat of one of the dead; j one of tho date of 1832. the other 1846.— j On leaving the field of battle I turned one ! The t<\-uD of the wounded Russians over on his back. ’ York show? He had. a fearful sabre cut in his side. The : , Rule or Ruin. of the recent election of New ouulusiyely that the :mti-Ad- in the American Exchange Bank la brought to I Palmerston are strongly in favor of nmre light, diiil to-dav, we are told, another error is de- 1 energetic measures toward the German tested in the eoi-ount of one of the ch-rk? of the j Powers, who nmiiot be suffered it p urged, . I r» i • -*i c u to cover Russia 8 weakest side with their Nalionnl Bank. Thus, commencing with Sthuv- I „ r . - »• tu**- , . A „ j wall of impossible neutnUitv. tne> must Ur. is followed out the system throughout aU = ^ ^against tlie nliitAs. The war is grades from the highest to the lowest, so I am in , u0{ p et „ e cn two small States, harmless daily expectation of having my penholder and i for t}ie „f r he rest. It is a European slippers stolen from my sanctum during some re- i struggle, and every great Power must needs cess from my labour. A gentiemau sitting half { take part in it. This is the point to-be .tot*, asleep in the Astor House, yesterday,-aetnally had tied between Napoleon, ou one side, and his pocket picked of a gold watch, but fortuuately ' Lord Palmerston, as tlie representative of the roblier was caught in the very act, and is now , the Cabinet, on the other. in the. Tombs. One would suppose that an- ! 1 Lo second point to be discussed is Po- : cient individual, who -hall be nameless, would i land. litis, hov. ever, will be talked oyer have enough to do on borders of the Black Sea, | as a future question, to come as an actuality nmong the Russians and Allies, without troubling after the Germau Powers shall h:t\ e ein- himself with this part of our numdove sphere,but • braced one or the other party. I hear that on the contrary, he seem- so busy here that you the Baltic fleet, hot > ■ ., ’ .. , . , , . ' English, will immediately be dispatched to would suppose him exclusively engaged by our , ■ T . . . . , . . r . , 11 - 6 * - the East, the ships lieitig to transport great 1 i • . i i reinforcements of ail arms. Speaking ol the Black Sea and the allied army If sWteDients be correct, the mis- and fleet at Set astopol. the best mtormaUon re- , B j on of Llir(i p M.MF.BsroN is the most im- celved indicates that the place will not only not be j . wrtant political move which has been made takeu. but that the allies themselves, iu all proba- j n Europe for months. Thev indicate that bility, la- annihilated. This is a hard dose to j the a Hj e g bave ar ] ;lst discove'red how griev- swallow for those who have immaculate faith in oush' they blundered in appealing tu Ans- J'lim Bull and Bull-frog, and a sovereign con- j triau despotism, instead of addressingvthem- tempt lbr tho Bear. As I have always been a bear ; selves to Hungarian. Italian, ami Polish iu this controversy I am supposed to grin, but lest j liberalism and i’TotuliiOnixin. for uid in their you may think me desirous of bringing too much ; war against the Russian autocrat. A lead ing member of tlie revolutionary party, i probably Kossuth, is said to have given the i following advice to a member oi the Eng lish parliament: "Recall vour troops from the Crimea, send vour reinforcements to the Rhino, to j ... , ministration i>e:-.i"ci-ats ffXw- York, under poor devil looked anvthtng but good teiujier- . . , ,. ,, , , , Id at me. They are' all stern? determined J lho k>;wl 1,4 ** looking fellows, and if these are a sample of ‘ tered the canvass 'wuh a deliberate actor- the army, they are certainly not clothed in ‘ munition to rule or ntiii tb.e party of tlii-v tlie wretched manner that the flkjority^f | State in the contest. On the eve of the it that Bivn- .1 election, when u became wide on stood no jKWsihle chance oi the people of England are led to believe.— ’ Their clothes are very good—quite equal to our army, and their arms also. I speak of . their cavalry. I did not see any of their ' Seymour s prosper:? were tan- for receiving infantry among the killed and wounded, as n large majority, these self-consfitufCd guur- they were not engaged near the spot. diam of nithmal principles, locking only * v suamefui. CONDUCT of the tukks. the defeat ol' the Democratic Administration Had our Turkbh friends only spiked the candidate, made a general stampede -lie’ guns before destroying them, it would hate , th „ J ihmm pai-t-v. or ca-t Their votw W been less disastrous : but that onr own guns-- , , ... ,,, guns- : . , , should be made use of, with our own amiuu- Ul '” r< ‘ nition, against- us, and through the coward ly conduct of these for whom we are sacri ficing England’s best blood and treasure, is too provoking and discreditable to write about: and 1 am sorry to say that, nut con tent with deserting their post, they plunder ed everything they could lay their hands on, eveu to the very breakfasts which some men of the Greys were preparing for their officers, who were then out in lace of tlie enemy. The universal feeling is, that a very severe example should lie made of this flagrant act for Clark. thofVTiig 1\1> ditton Co alition candidate. Through their in r'Cteraie hostility to. the- Administration they have not hesitated to turn tveitors n> tl'.ei - own professed principles and g-> over praerically, will consequently lie no mail sent until tlie sailing ef the A m^rienn steamer Pacific, ; the government imving taken the Niagara oft’ the Halifax rente. The next advices will be received hy the steamer' Enron via. Southampton and will bn four days inter. After this there will be an interval of ..no week until rbe sailing of :ss. and i thfc Pacific. Pitot!OF THE SIEUE. There is nothing really later from the scat of war. A pause has-ensued in the field fighting before Sebastopol. Despatches, both Russian and British, say tho siege is progressing with regularity and that prepa rations were making by the allies for an assail!-. ed from there for the Crimea, with a favora ble wind. The Sultan had degraded Sulejaman Pa cha, the eoiinnainlcv of the Turkish troops in the Crimea A Turkish man >-l war, the Abadiselie. had foundered, with a Turkish Admiral and seven hundred nieu, on hoard. An Egyp tian frigate had also been lost in tho Black Sea. Miss Nightingale, with 34 nurses for tlie hospitals at S-urtari. hud arrived, at Con stantinople. Th At’ri a i Second Dispntcii. moral intelligence by the steamer itghlv interesting and excitin; Both iKitties are greatly in want of rein- though'there wits nothing more of a decisive forcemeats, the besiegers, however, ave . character fn-iii Sebastopol beyond the Pt-h ! worse off’ than the besieged. Tho Russians insr. Breaches iiad been made bv the allies begin to he in want of ammunition. The allies have suffered fearfully. Thev example snouiu ne rnaue oi tins nagrinit act , n , . ... , of cowardice, the probable result of which . Fh . c T™y- ™ will V into view, his four.-hip. I will close the subject by merely stating that out of thirty thousand Eng lish sent to Turkey but sixteen thousand were loft at last advices: that the Frenchmen anPFerod some what less: that food for the soldiers is becoming exceedingly scarce, and provender for horses still Italv and Poland, summons the Austrians interdict against our Minister to Spain.— ! A deputation to this effect actually wait ed upon Mr. Mason. The departure of the Americans, adds the writer, would have been a serious loss to Paris. There arc s-tid to'be a thousand families of them there, and they are proverbially among the wealthiest and most extravagant people of this guv eapital. It is highly probable that the dread of such awful consequences induced the Em peror to revoke his order. M'iint would have become of Paris in the event of such an abandonment. The Memphis Navv Yard, having been : tendered to the city oi'Memphis, as a free gift, by Congress has been tendered back • again by the city authorities. Tlie Washington Star says that a son of James Gordon Bennett the editor of the N. Y. Jlernfd, through the favor of the French Emperor, is being educated at the French military academy. The coal beds of East Tennessee are be- t ginning to excite attention and interest. They are located on the line of tlie Xtisli- ville and (’hattanooga Rail Rond. The coal' is bituminous and of a soft texture. A Hostile Demonstration Against Hol land.—It is stated that the administration 1 contemplate a naval demonstration in tlie ports of Dutch India, to enforce the claim of Oapt. Gibson, and compel the authorities there to receive a consular agent from the United States. A private letter from Honolulu says that the King of the Sandwich Islands Las signed i the Treaty ceding the islands to the United States, and is only waiting for the return of Prince Alexander to obtain his signature, and absolutely deliver up the Kingdom.— The United States, sloops-of-war Portx- i mouth and St. Mary*, wereisithat Honolulu, and everything was quiet. jpgjf-Tho Portuguese Consul at New-York, , it is stated, has been indirectly implicated in the transactions in the slave trade for I which Captian Smith has ju't been comic- ' ted there. The District Attorney laid all; the facts in reference thereto before the ! U. S. Secretary of State, by whome the at-! tendon of the Portuguese Minister at Wash ington was called to tlie affair.' Another Railroad--A public meeting was held in Griffin on the 28th nit., toy take into ■ eoiisiderat’.on the project of a" Railroad from that place to Covington, via ’ McDonough. The meeting resolved in fit-' vor of the enterprise and adjourned to meet again in Gri&n on the first Tuesday in Jan uary. more so; thnt the Rnssisns arc constantly roceiv- y . • ing reinforcements, and when they do fight | R* ^ ^ Primipa lt»es to eav e^t e^aiUlitry^or they tight like demons whilst their cannon practice is equal to any in the world; that the shoal water around the fortifications and tlie sunk en ships iu the mouth of the harbor prevent the approach of the heavy ships within tho distance of eight hundred yards, nud at that distance little impression can be produced during the day which cannot be repaired at night; that the rocky forma tion of the country around Sebastopol entirely prevents the regular approaches for bombarding the town, such as <*eu. Scott made at Vera Cruz; and finally it is conceded on all hands thnt though the town may fall, yet tho Northern forts cannot l>e taken in any event, and the allies, after burn ing tho Hussiun ships, will be compelled to take to their ships and return to Turkey, and thus will cud the campaign of tho Crimea, which was ex pected to he so brilliant, and by which the bear's ■ ail, at least, w as to bo severed from his huge body. Whilst nil those momentous events are taking place abroad, we are just waking up in this city to a state of bankruptcy in the mercantile communi ty. Onr importations have been much larger than our produce of gold in California, and our .'inking- fund of specie is gradually disappearing from our midst and taking up its line of march for Sebasto pol. Five hundred thousand went hy the Niaga ra, and two hundred thousand by the Collins’ Steamer on Saturday. As a consequence of this stale of things each day announces some heavy failure in the mercantile circles us well as among the hanks. Yesterday (he Toledo Bank suspend ed and it is a fact that if the depositors were call ed for this afternoon from all the hanks in this city none of them could meet the demands, much less could they redeem with specie their hills. I do not wish to do these excellent institutions in justice or excite distrust. They nil have abundant 'asset.* consisting of stocks and real estate, hut un fortunately in this time of universal depreciation, when New Y'urk central stock is going down five per cent, a week, and other stocks, equally sound and good, iu the same proportion, fifty per cent, i.-, a fair estimate to lie obtained for what is really worth double; and if the banks should continue then- present line of discounts there is every pros pect of a speedy emptying of their vaults of what little specie remains in them. Nevertheless they do not seem to realize fully tho volcano that is now under them; and from a conversation with one Vcsterdny who, from having been an omnibns driver became a bank president. I was led to infer that there was no danger whatsoever. I have been told that he made a capital stage driver and managed the finance-’ of hi? charge box capitally, hut X mu<t confess to a little distrust in his sagac ity iu protecting holders of six hundred thousand dollars "f hi? bank bills. These statements are not made with a view of disparaging the gentle man alluded to by any means, hut merely to illus trate the mode of doing businesss in New York, tlie persons who do it and what will be the legiti mate result, of the tinkeriug of our finances re ceived during the past five years. to fight with you. Cross the I*ruth after having recrossed tlie Black Sea. and call upon the nations, who listen, and not to the ! Cabinets, which are deaf, and you will gain the battle of civilization against barbarism. With your nettl'd means of warfare you be come ridiculous and will he beaten. ' Lord Palmerston is reported (one knows not how truly) to have said to the same gentleman : "I take Pandora's box to Paris, and perhaps we may send it from there to i Vienna, that they may open it to find in it | our ultimatum.” Hitherto the straggle between the high contesting powers has been to see which ■ could do most in favor of the miscalled , cause of order : that is. to maintain the ex-; isting despotism on tlie continent. In play ing that giune all the advantage lias, of course, been on the side of the Russian em- peror. Let the stake be taken hy which over party, liberalism was likely to gain i nothing. Indeed we are not sure but hith erto it lias had more to hope from the pro fessed despotism ol‘ Russia than the boast- , ed freedom of England. It has not been quite certain that the alliance between Eng land and Austria, if effected, might not, through Russian interposition, bring about the independence of Hungary, and the re-establishment of the nationality of Po land. Should the allies, convinced of their er ror, change their policy, and appeal from the cabinets to tlie down-trodden masses of Europe, then they may entitle themselves to our forfeited sympathies. M e await the future with the liveliest anxiety.—Socunnvh Georgian. [Correspon-Xenec of the Baltimore Sun.] Washington. Nov. 3*>. 1854. Distribution of the President's Message— j Lord Patntersfov’s Visit to France—The 1 Eastern War—Adrantu'je to the Collins Line of Steamers—The Quirk Conreyanee of Troops—The Post- Opiee Dejuirtment— ■ Gen. Cass’ Arriral-—Illinois, &e. All the steamers expected t<> arrive be fore the delivery of the President’s Message being in, and none expected in less than a week, there is no apprehension of any ne cessity to withhold the President’s Message, and it will therefore be forwarded to the Northern cities ns usual, to be there deliver ed as soon as it is sent to Congress hero in Washington. It is to be hoped that the copies destined for Baltimore will not be carried, by mistake, to Philadelphia as they were a year ago. Baltimore is an excellent distributing point, and is well entitled to a share of official courtesy. It is extremely doubtful whether the visit of Lord Palmerston to the Emperor of the French has reference t > Cuba. Panama, Greytovn or Sandwich Islands. Palmers ton is. next io Nesselrode, the ablest diplo matist in Europe, and would hardly set out on such a fool’s errand. It is far more like ly that the visit of his- Lordship has refer- Tlit- Americnu people—that is, this portion of j to matters in Germany, and to a spring them—have been on a spree for several years.— j campaign on the Rhine, to be followed hy a They have champagne and now they got tlie r-,</ diversion on tho Y'ismlri. jin iu gratis. They have sported fine clothe? of i If the war continues there is a fair pros- foreign manufacture and they must now wear them j pect of the Collin? line ot steamers doing out. Thev are beginning to find out that the i the whole transatlantic mail sorvicc between Irish nre not the only thing? that have been im- j the United States and Great Britain, ported which has caused trouble, and that there is I S P’*- C °* the talij (most of it all about much inconvenience in paying for their I balderdash) against the line, it i? tlie only . . ' , . , . i American line ot steamships tv men lias-re- old acute uti there is in preserving their heads „ , , ?• r . , ® _ . | allv been built according to t&e terms ot the ot an Irish umb on election j , vith tho government, and which hoped that the Know-Noth- j j ias performed the service in all regularity, iligs who arc to kindly disposed to take the man- ; punctually, aud the greatest speed attained ugeme.it of affairs into their hand? will consider l by auv steamship in tho world, these questions, also, and relieve u.- in some way j The use of the Cuuarder? for war pur- froin such revulsion? aud convulsions of trade as poses, on account of their speed, is iiow we are now subject to. j demonstrated in England. How much bet- It is cheering amid the dark cloud that hang? i ter could the larger aud faster ships of the over u- to know that the farming interest is sound, i Collins line be employed between New York, mid but few of the tillers of the soil in debt for I or New Orleans, or Cuba, or any,other point the foreign stufl’s which have heen forced upon us I to which it might be important to send ro- tbrougli the Custom House by means of the false ; inforceinents ? There is not a steamer in swearing to invoices and other little enormities | the United. States Navy that etiuld not be which pushes a great ileal of brandy and silk at a distanced by the voliius line, if, indeed, low price, afterwards to be retailed for double the there is any at all fit to convey troops with amount. This was one of the fruits of the «•/ r»- ! 6 P® e *‘ an( t ■ . . , - . i r ,i .. -r i - 'I have already, m a previous letter, stated ton in instead of the specific duties. ' , • ’ « , r ’ ... ... , , - , , . ,, ! that tho revenue ot the Post-Office Pepart- Another cotton Inctorv failed lately at l tiea. ] . , . , , . 1 ... in’, f , ■ ment has increased, and that its expenses and a is not improbable that others will soon fol- , . . . , , ,, „ j , r , .. have diminisued during the last fiscal Tear, low-tur want of money to carry them on. ]^ ^ only add th:uthis wa _, done> j vbi l e Hour has reached twelve dollars since my last , Between twelve and thirteen hundred new and is hastening to fiitceu dollars by retail. There , post-offices were established for the greater is a further rise in Europe, lmt not sufficient to accommodation of the public, pay for shipments. j General Cass is expected hero on Satur- iViitics of course is •• emlirixf," perfectly pro- : day, and has engaged rooms at Willard's, miscuous. The administration is apparently an- ; where the Speaker of the House and his nihilnted. not even having a corporal’s guard to i lady will also be during the winter, support or stand hy it in its worst trying time. 1 The regular Democrats in the Logisla- lionn. Piatt has just arrived from Paris with | ture of Illinois are, 1 am creditably ini'orm- iinportant dispatches from Mr. Mason, our Minis- I ®*U still in the majority, and the brave ter to the French. Instead of scattering the Cab- * General shields will, in all probability, be inet it is thought that the Cabinet will recall J ^ own successor, as previously telegraphed. Soule, and perhaps Mason. Though I must eon- I _ __ _ 2_ fess 1 do not put much confidence in these disclo- j DESPERATE RENCOUNTER.—YYe learn that - iul ‘ e '-. a remarkable fight occurred in Amsterdam, Advice? are received that there will be a rising iu tb j s ( ., )antv> a few days since, between an in Cuba withm the next few months, and that ! eagle and an owl. The eaglo seized upon seems to he the most probable rumor yet afloat. ! the owl, but found bis, prey too weighty to 1 he Sandwich Islands are not yet annexed, luit be carried off, and in the scuffle, the owl it seems pretty certain they will come in some- [ fastened his claws in the eagle’s thigh, and how or other. *** 1 held his enemy so tight as to make it im- Scsnk.—The crowded deck of an Anieri- j possible for him to escape. While in this will be another hard fought battle, with a jsissibility of evacuating Baluklava ! THE TURKS TURNING COWARDS. Whenever during the day you saw any of tho Turkish soldiers, voii saw the pc0pd[ hooting them and calling them cowards and runaways. I witnessed two Irish women actually driving four of these chivalrous gentry before them, making them carry pome things for them, probably to their own wounded husbands, and saying. ‘Eii you cowardly diviis, this is all you’re fit for. t- - be our servants: sure, you are afraid to fight;’ and on our return I saw a young Middy drawn up before some fifty of them, abusing them most heartily for their having run away. One of them made a sign as if he was going to draw his sword, when the Middy sang out, ‘Oh,’ said he. ‘I’ui n-4 afraid of you, such a set of cowards as you are.’ set his arms a-kimbo, and then stood, the picture of a young lion. NIGHT ATTF.R BATTLE. We picketed our horses after the battle of the Alma, and in those very line.? there were sians. ‘unger bv material body and soul, to th common enemy. And ; have been reduced by battle and disease to vet these are the men jvho l ave possessed : oO.ihiu men. This terrible fact was causing *i i- i , .i,.. • ... jo-1 ; i mncli alarm in England and France, ami the uvelv svmpathv ol the tsuuuitn:-B nigs, , ... e , . , . • , * 1 . • . ' i the utmost efforts were matting to send m- :is x*ing tin- oui> true and lionuine i-oiit-cr-j reinforcements. All the mail stoam- vators of national principles among the ers arc chartered for tho service. Northern Deiiioern--v. Well, let tiicm go h i The winter was setting in severely, and stormy weather had been felt in tlie Black Sen. Two Turkish frigates had been wrecked. i The great Russian Hospital in Sebastopol, assemblin'''"! containing2.000wounded soldiers, had been ur F,,n- ! spt ,,u fl'-o by the gun? of tlie allies and i burnt. i Austria’s reply to Prussia. ! The Austrian note in reply to the Prus- • sian n-.to of the 30th of October, arrived at Berlin .i! the 12th. aud as far as tlie con- 1 tents have transpired Austria gladly n<- : cent? Prussia-’s - promised support in the ! iViiicipalitioB. i-ut lays great stress ou hav- ' ing thi? assistance viewed as a logical ami j necessary consequence of tlie treaty of i \nril 20th, rather than as a new arrangc- belx.g purged of such disorgauiziir rongros?. Yesterday' was the day for of the sujoud .n.-.'sdou -f the prose gre*a. i tom tiro numerous arrivals of mem bers noticed in our late Washington e.\- changes. we presume a respectable number were prmup'Jy in attendance on. the iifst day. As the President’s Message has ';->t been scut out to the principal Sanborn cit ies in advance of its delivery', case last year, h will hardly i? ..ur readers before the latte; a? MSI.? laid !, parr oi jS-jW- Bv tlm Savannah Georgian > day morning last, we notice ton, Esq., has withdrawn ft department of that paper, in aiiudmv urcscnt week. • PREPARING FOR AN ASaAULT. 11 was expected in the French camp that that K. B. Hit.-I tin assault would be made on the 5th of •m the editorial ‘ November, and it- probably would have been, bad not the Russians attacked the allies* the separation of Mr. II. from the Georgian, , .id. the firing was slack on both tiie senior partner. Mr. Punch says. “ Git- , and preparations were being made for fercnce? of opinion connected with the j an assault. Scaling ladders. &e., had been thirty wounded and dead Ilus- course to be pursued in' this paper, have ne- ! ordered up from tho camp. I slept side hy side with two dead curro d between Mr. Hilton and myself Four Russian ships had been sunk iu the Russians, who were killed by a Camion. T which nutXetcl our further union nnpracti- ! }». arhor , . of Sebastopol by the tire of the a!- was not aware of their close prosumtv un- .. , , • .. lie**. Une ot the ships was the famou* til the next morning. AYe stopped here two >1, '- ,UR a^speo* y sc paiau.i.s a 1,1 ' 1 *• !-Twelve Apostles, which had been doing davs to bury tlie dead, dress tlie wounded expediency. 1 I s? much execution as a battery against the and send the captured guns and prisoners _ , ~7 1 T ” , , I besiegers. to be shipped. On the day of the battle, of r,vor P ,ratl ‘ s . ,mvv bce,) horrors of the siege. which was thought one of the bloodiest ever detected, who have been committing whole- i r j i,A typhus fever lias broken out iu Sc- known, all tlie troops fought on, was the sale depredations upon the \ essd.? lying in | bastopol, induced by the great numbers of usual pound of biscuit a mau; their rum Philadelphia harbor, for a long time past, unburied dead. To add to the miseries of the inhabitants, conflagrations were also ! continually occuring from the red hot shot thrown into tlie place. Tlie supply of water was also getting exceedingly scarce. was not served out until it was over, now the riflemen manage. One of (Im most wonderful things I think is to see the way in which our riflemen go about in small detached parties, crawling along on the ground up the side of a hill, till they appear to be within 300 yards of the enemy, and tints they lie on their bellie? till a chance offers, when crack goes a Iliuie. and down falls a Russian. I v as informed most credibly that one of these brave ltd- lows a few days since thought lie would go aud do a little business on his own account, got away from his company-, crawled up close to a battery under shelter of a hill lay- on his back aud loaded, and turned over and fired, when, after killing eleven men, a par ty rushed out, and he took to his heel.?, but, sad to say, a volley, fired after him by this party, levelled him with the earth, and he was subsequently picked up with 82 balls in liia body. Treeing a Wild Cat.—The hunting of this particular species of varmint is not un fashionable in Georgia. Here is a sample of the mode of treeing the animal: “ The Insurance and Banking Comjianf’ is located at Dalton, on the State Road, in Georgia. Its “promises” werc’spwnbroad cast in the country, and it had become quite a promising kitten, with no undue develope- ment of claws. Thus stood things, up to six days ago, when a Mr. Brantley handed tire of many of tli to Mr. John Glen, (an officer of the road) 81500 of its notes, with the request to call fur the specie, the first time he passed up. Mr. Glenn according visited the institution, and informed the Cashier, he had come to make a small draw on him. " Happy to oblige—how much ?” said tlie trv. Cashier, gleefully. “Only 81500!” was the reply. At the mention of so enormous a sum the bank officer fell back in his chair, and 1. ink ed appealingly to Heaven. “ Can’t you pay ?” demanded Glenn. •’ Not that amount,’’ frankly replied the Cashier. “If it were 85, or810—or even —the institution would have made an ef fort—but I feel that it is all o\er with us! If we could but have time to marshal our assets,” he paused—and in deference to “the aided by a small sloop, called tlie General Taylor, and two batteaux. The captain of tin? pirate sloop. Richard Simmon.?, has been arrested, as well as several receiver* ! The Russians were evidently- expeetiu of the stolen good.?, of which Jailer large ! an assault and preparing for street fighting, quantities have been recovered. posting cannon to sweep the street.?, and ! fortifying the houses and preparing other ) means fur a desperate resistance. The English official account of the action ; of the 5th die ' 16th, owing to ' Lord Raglan says: “The enemy with an immense force at- ' nicked yesterday at the dawn of morning the right wing of the English position.— The battle which resulted was extremely ] obstinate, and not till past noon was tlie ; enemy definitely repulsed and forced to re treat. leaving the field covered with hi? . dead, and with a loss of several hundred taken prisoners. The number of the ene my much exceeded that in the battle of Alma. The losses of the Russians are enor mous. Our losses have also been very great. Generals Sir George Brown, Bentink, Ad ams. Butler and Torrens are wounded. The conduct of our troops, iu the face of an en emy so superior in numbers, was most ox- i eolient." A Russian official letter say s that the ar- ; rival of the Grand Dukes at Sebastopol pro duced such enthusiasm in the ranks that the I Russian eommador thought well to turn it Some 1 to account, and consequently, ou the nth, the garrison made two sorties, the first ::t one o'clock in tlie afternoon, against tlie En glish, and the second ar two o'clock against the French. The affair with tlie English was most des perate, and it is said the Russians succeed ed in spiking their guns. On the side of the French 15 guns were also spiked l.y the Rus sians. After this tho Russians retired with all haste, when the French division pursued them until under the very walls of the city where they were received with a most mur derous fire, and had to fall back. The strug gle was most sanguinary and obstinate, and was prolonged until nightfall. Prince Mensehikoff admits a loss of 4.060 Arrest of tue Celebrated Oapt. 5 al- men, aud adds that the loss of the allies was in id. ' A monument of Italian marble bus (icon placed in :he Unitarian Church at i juincy, Muss., hy Charles F. Adams, ty tlie memory of Ids father, ox-president John Quincy Adams. It is ?tirinoinitedby a bust of tlie deceased, executed by Powers, tho American sculptor. IIon. S. A. Douglv?.--Fioiu the -lackson Mississippian, we learn umi lion. Sdcplieh A. Douglas, was in that city on the 20th nit. on hi.? way to Lawrence runty ou bus iness of a private character. His arrival was entirely unexpected, bur the citizens turned out almost unanimously and extend ed him a most warm aud enthusiastic wel come. He left the next-day for Washington via New Orleans. A Crisis in the Iron Business or Penn sylvania.—•• W« regret to learn,'’ says the Columbia Spy. “of tin- suspension and fail- in the enemy's fortresses by incessant can nonading, but they had no special effect, and were filled up by the Russians almost a? soon n? made. Tim tiring had slackened considerably on both sides, and considerable time had been consumed in burying the dead, and clearing away the rubbish of tho battle ou the oth. The allies were fortifying their position mi tho loft bank of Tscheruaga. The rumored engagement of the 6th was without foundation in truth. No fresh sor tie? Iiau been made until the 8th. Right thousand English and French troop?, and one thousand six hundred sea men wore about making au assault, which was expected .-'qn to take place. Scaling ladders had been ordered up for this pur- pCW". It wit? thougbi’ ar last account* that tho roar of the allies' position was made im pregnable. Further destructive, fires had taken place iu 8cba?topoi, but they were extinguished. A magazine and warehouse of provisions wove destroyed. Two Russian frigates had been burnt by tho English. Tho ship of the iiuc " Twelve Apostles " was also burnt or bl"Wn up. Two thousand English horses and muni tion? of war had reached Malta on the 11th. The ?teamcr Jurva arrived there with more troops, and several Turkish detachments were dose upon tho Benarab'uu frontier. A body of sixteen hundred Turks had ' been attacked on the Dr with heavy loss. The British division and tho French also were steadily sapping toward? tlie walls of Sebast'ippl. The British had constructed a large cover ed wav. terminating in front of the Russian Redoubt fort, which will serve as a cover to n strong bb iy in the final struggle. The Hospital of Sebastopol was set on lire by a bombshell from the allies, and it was soon, in flames. There were about two thousand sick and wounded therein at the time, all of whom perished in the flames and were buried in the ruins. This is de scribed a? a must appalling and heartrending scene. The English journals assert that tlie pri vate account? about the dreadful reverses of the allies arc not confirmed. The steamer Magura had also been char tered to convey troops to the Crimea, conse- heavv companies era ed in the iron business iu this State, of those regarded a? tlie most stable gone, and the indications are that vv now hut in the beginning of one of tlie i ost financial crisis over known f roat- u? c'ouu- BQL, In the New York Election, it is a singular fact that while for Governor Glark, whig, received 156.776 vote.?, uml Seymour, democrat. 156.455. tlie combined vote of i 1- raan and Bronson amounts to 156.156, thus showing a curious division of the people in to three equal segments’ txncia.—The New Orleans pre-s records the ! at least equal. According to his account, pheiinx" of* the dry nurse of the kitten, Mr. arrest of the noted Dou Carlos Yallencia, . 23,000 Russians were engaged in this at- Glenn withdrew “a wiser and sadder man !” —Swan's Gazette. alias De Castro, charged with breaking open , i.i- ,i ,■ -... - .... Mcnseli'.koft announces that, he a trunk and taking thereirnm >2 >. I lie frurn tlie thelaloh; d»v. h is to h. Preparing for Spring.—The Emperor of Russia is having guns of louger range east in Petrosawosk and Croustadt, which are to be mounted upon the fortifications of tlie latter place next spring. This does not look like giving the “material guarantees” which England and France desire. -V? the Emperor will have ail winter to prepare himself tor the expected visit in the spring. St. Petersburg will doubtless lie in a good state of defence when the contest comes. What Becomes of the Specie?—This is a question asked by almost everybody, and has become a newspaper theme. The an swer is, that it has gone to the * seat of war.’ ■where the belligerents are killing each oth er hy tho thousand to ‘ spread Christianity’ Millions.—Tho recent abundaut rains will be worth millions of dollars to the country. A. letter from Boston, under date of the 23d, says: “We have had, for the last week or two, very copious rains. Yesterday there was a pouring rain all day. The value of these reasonable rate. ing made pretensions of belonging t- a n..,- ; ceived this evening, according to which, an- ble family. He was soon, however, exposed other and detected in various swindling and forg- Ike iug transactions, and wa- compelled to fiv Th from that city to save himself. Since that they remained masters of the field Siek- time he has been in most .four Southern ness was on the increase in the allied camp, and Western cities, aud lias carried on hi. A Turkish 80 gun ship had been sunk in peculiar Operations wherever he has been. ® ’ n Black Sea. He arrived in this cit y about two weeks ago, Official Russian news, via Vienna, states and brought with him from Kentukv. where that i>rom the 5th to thc 9th nothing of im- * ’ ’ ’ .... * portanee had occurred. The bombardment continued, but the breeches were always re paired. ritOM THE BALTIC. At Petersburg advices report that the Eu- quentlv no steamer will leave Liverpool for not reach London until the < Stat (y ««*il th « de P a, ts telegraphic interruptions. 2°th of November, (to-day.) ° 1 llie fleets were suffering disasters at .?eu, and could take no parr in the bombardment. It was rumored that the object of Lord Palmerston's visit fo France was to consult with the Emperor upon the re-establishment of Poland to her former nationality. Other reports say, however, thnt his object was to make an alliance to prevent America from absorbing *.'iibn, Hay ti..and rlic .Sandwich Islands. Frightful gale? had occurred on the black sea. Four ships of the Russian fleer : a Turkish ship ot • s 'i> guns, and a frigate had been sunk. There have been serious appre hensions that accounts of other terrible dis aster? would be received. The first French division had been de tached tram tho army of coign to increase aud strengthen the army of observation. The cu'ndtidii of affairs at Sebastopol i? represented as a.wl'ui. The streets are crowd ed with sick, de;Hl cud dying men, women and children. Prince Napoleon "-would persist ' in com manding the storming columns of Sebasto pol. Prince -Jerome B-map: la also there and rapidly his valorous acts. He is j rijand. t The inhabitant? of■.$<jba©tynql were, at last accounts, suffering‘dreadfully for want of water. The Russians were unable- to bury their dead, and tiny n ere throwing tho putrid bodies into the .?"a, which rejected them, and the shore was literally strewn with hu man bodies, from which was emitted a sick ening stench for miles around. Admiral Lyons was watching the sea of Azob. All merchant vessels were closely scrutinized. An immediate attack was anticipated on the Russian Danube flotilla at Ismael. Menschikoff was concentrating his forces at Bakchi, Sera. Semipheropal and other Admiral Naehimofi, who was reported i J0 \ uth r ^ e Neighborhood, dead is said to have recovered and resumed prevailed, rat not given much active dtrv credit, that the tzar had accepted the tour “another, great battle. points as a basis to direct negotiations with Vienna despatches to the 15th say:—Des- Austria and agreed. to» withdraw tlie troops vn.. iroill lil^ vt Extensive u te, of Baltimore, gaining favor for won to have a uom- about to concentrate all hi? forces now at Batelics- rai. Simpferoyol and other places Bee. say? : He commenced his career as barbar at Vera Crux, but hi- restless nature would not allow him long to remain in this servile con dition, and we hear of our quondam scra per iu New York, .whore he was received, • “? f Pn m the GnlaeTin frontiors with open arms bv the aristocracy, lie hav- F a *-hes from Balaklava to the 11th Avere re- trjm the 1 alaoian i at o s ' preparations were making to is ot a very prepossessing appearance aud conversation, and is not above twenty-six years of age. He is, it is said, master of no less than four languages, and i? also au excellent musician and painter. ary battle had been feught before Sebasto pol, on the 11th, in which both sides suffer ed immense slaughter. Many thousands were reported to have been killed. France has made a levy for 200.000 men a loan of 600,000,000 “francs. Additional troops weru hourly expected to reach the Crimea. A Liverpool letter says newreinforcemonts are daily being sent out, and new levies made, and whilst this continues there can be no prospect of ease in money circles, or a giiah fleet had leit tho Baltic, and thnt win- revival of business and industry, ter had set in with unusual severity. There is nothing new or strange from Asia England. or affair? on the Danube. Outer Pasha hud Lord Palmerston did not leave London for made no definite movement?. fl^-The Cuba question, it is said, will be ! Paris until the 16th. 3 * uuh “stress prevails amongst tho poor- fomiallv brought before tlie Spanish Cortes, An official statement of the affairs of Ales- o.asses in Ireland and England, and m s n v . . -— ---- -- ----- now in session, at Madrid. It is understood srs. Allen & Anderson had been published, inet throughout Europe, tat rains is incalculable, especially, since tf, at a conference was reeentlv held in tho The estate would pav about 5s. in the the arctic’s passexgrs. £7““ w fl ere S °t IO ra V R 1Uay . 800 ^ presence of General Espartero, 31. Pacheco’ pound. ' * The Africa brings nothing further in re- obtain floar a iower hgur«i and and t p e English and French ambassadors, fraxce. „ ard to t ] )0 Arctic’s passengers, and all pi ers may get their piper at a more when it was determined to oppose any prop- a 110 v,- French loan of five or six hundred hope of over hearing from them is nearly or osition for tira cession of any nortion of the millions of francs is spoken of. quite abandoned. being withdrawn The election for Mayor and Aldermen took place in Savannah yesterday. The Democrats had a regular ticket in nomina- ickct had been an- tion?—Cariist.?. Moderadoe? m-ogressistas, -V mass of telegraphic dispatches woro re- gvjrGov. Reeder has authorized the and what not—including some* thivtv veli- ceived during the past night, but the follow- Kansas Herald to state that ho will order able democrat.?.’ j?g are the onl - v UCUIS not previously pub- the c i ec tion for Delegates to Congress, from lished: The arm was removed. •gest species, six feet across but he’s got better ueow, and he won’t stand j Snow in' .Georgia.—There was a slight it no longer.” 1 snow in Athens, the 28th ult. Eudcaation Dav was celebrated on Satur day, iu Xqw York, jvitlv much spirit. Na tional salutes were fired at sunrise and at noun, and flags wore flying from all the pub lic buildings, shipping, &c. The veterans of 1812 and numerous other military com panies paraded. Tho veterans were review- Savannah (Ga.) paper, eulogizing a Tho Duke of Cambridge had his horse ^ at Temt01 T. to take place on the 29th of who remained in the citv during tlie under hlU1 ’ anJ the English had 2,000 November. ■ “■ " ' f ki a a,,d Ti rr d 1 ri iu v the i battlC 0f i 2s a^-The North Georgia Times notices fourth. Ilte loss oi tho French was 1,500 , , ■ , ■■ and the Russian loss between seven and eight | lar 8 e llll “beie oi hogs constantly passing thousand. i ver the State Road for the Southern mur ed in the Park by General Van Rensselaer, Another editor inquires whether this lie . Prince Napoleon has arrived at Constau- j kets. On Monday there were fourteen car and subsequently dined at the Star House, prose or poetry? tinople, suffering from diarrhoea. . loads. A man prevalence of the fever, says : “AVhn doe? the best hi? circumstances allow?, Does well, acts nobly—mi-els could do no more.”